Really
in sentence
32169 examples of Really in a sentence
So you have this one last facade of the house, the front, which is
really
a cartoon of a facade of a house.
This is really, in fact, a television broadcasting a show 24/7 called "We're Normal."
We're going to have to re-learn what the building blocks of these things are: the street, the block, how to compose public space that's both large and small, the courtyard, the civic square and how to
really
make use of this property.
That distance is
really
important because it tells us how much light the planet receives overall.
And so, we can't
really
look at planets around other stars in the same kind of detail that we can look at planets in our own solar system.
But really, every measurement it makes is precious, because it's teaching us about the relationship between stars and planets, and how it's
really
the starlight that sets the stage for the formation of life in the universe.
When I got back to his office, I wasn't
really
sure.
There is another thing with those traits that we so easily observe in each other that I think is worthwhile to consider, and that is that, in a very literal sense, they're
really
on the surface of our bodies.
And I think it
really
brings to light: Is this
really
scalable?
Can we
really
scale this up?
Can we
really
embed robotics into every part?
And so what that
really
means is that our structures now contain the blueprints of what we want to build.
I looked into the face of one of these women, and I saw in her face the strength that arises when natural compassion is
really
present.
And it was
really
her strength, I believe, that became the kind of mudra and imprimatur that has been a guiding light in my life.
It is that ability to
really
stand strong and to recognize also that I'm not separate from this suffering.
But compassion has another component, and that component is
really
essential.
Another thing about compassion is that it
really
enhances what's called neural integration.
If compassion is so good for us, why don't we train our health care providers in compassion so that they can do what they're supposed to do, which is to
really
transform suffering?
They have infused societies with kindness, and we have
really
felt that as woman after woman has stood on this stage in the past day and a half.
I didn't always love unintended consequences, but I've
really
learned to appreciate them.
I've learned that they're
really
the essence of what makes for progress, even when they seem to be terrible.
And the anthropologist Randall White has made a very interesting observation: that if our ancestors 40,000 years ago had been able to see what they had done, they wouldn't have
really
understood it.
They were making it possible for us to do what they do, and yet, they didn't
really
understand how they did it.
And this is when it
really
gets interesting.
What would our ancestors 10,000 years ago have said if they
really
had technology assessment?
It was
really
bad news.
More recently, Harvey Cushing, who
really
developed neurosurgery as we know it, who changed it from a field of medicine that had a majority of deaths resulting from surgery to one in which there was a hopeful outlook, he was very conscious that he was not always going to do the right thing.
And Mark Twain, who knew all about typesetting,
really
was smitten by this machine.
It's
really
a question of the system, how the ship was loaded, the ballast and many other things.
So it shows that we're
really
all in this together.
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